Book Review — Africa’s World War
Oxford University Press Enters
the Tabloid Market
A review of:
Africa’s World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe
by Gerard Prunier.
Published by Oxford University Press, 2008.
Reviewed by:
Thomas (Tom) P. Odom
LTC US Army (ret)
Author,
Journey Into Darkness: Genocide In Rwanda
In early 1994 while serving as the US Defense Attaché in
Kinshasa, Zaire I had an unexpected visitor, a Zairian army lieutenant colonel
who told the Marine Security Guard that he had “urgent business” to discuss with
“le Colonel Odom.” Since he knew my name, I asked my NCO, Stan, to go get him.
As I sat down with my visitor, I signaled Stan to stay and listen.
The Zairian began with a blast against US perfidy,
imperialism, and assorted rot until I asked him to explain what had him all
excited. Swelling even more, he proclaimed he had written proof that the US had
secretly invaded Zaire in the 1970s. Intrigued I asked him to show me and he
handed me a dog-eared copy of Michael Crichton’s novel, Congo.
Crichton’s book began with a introduction that treated a
fictional infiltration of the Congo in 1979 as fact to entice a would be reader.
Central to the story was a heretofore unknown breed of super apes who would
wreck havoc on the 12-person invasion force.
The literary slight of hand worked on the Zairian colonel,
so well in fact that he then tried to blackmail me with a threat to go public.
He was crushed when I told him that a movie made from the book was already
available. I offered to find him a copy but offered no cash. He left no doubt in
search of further conspiracies whose revelation might help his cash flow.
Reading Gerard Prunier’s latest book,
War, made me feel like I had that Zairian colonel back in my office. A
tale of dark conspiracy woven with incompetence made me wonder if there was
indeed a fictional Congo with an eastern neighbor, Rwanda, out there. Prunier’s
writings suggest there has to be a parallel universe. Certainly there are
elements of recognizable truth involved in Prunier’s tale if you have the
regional expertise to recognize them. Without a firm grounding in the region,
however, one risks being fooled just like the Zairian colonel back in 1994.
To be more direct, let me just say that as a participant in
some of the events described in this book, I found numerous errors of fact,
doubtful analysis, and dubious sourcing, I am disappointed to say the least
because I looked forward to reading the book as a follow on to Prunier’s earlier
works on the Rwandan tragedy. In contrast to those efforts, this book is
neither good history nor good journalism. Good history relies on analysis of
facts, personal accounts, public documents, and at least makes a stab at
balanced analysis. Journalism implies writing without an agenda. Prunier sets
the tone for this work by his dedication to Seth Sendashonga, the exiled former
Interior Minister who was assassinated in Nairobi in 1998. Sendashonga, Hutu
member of the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), fled Rwanda after a falling out with
then Vice President Paul Kagame. In exile, Sendashonga pandered a story of RPF
killings that challenged credibility. Prunier dedicates his book to him; if you
bother to read the sole appendix to the book about Seth’s assassination. On page
367, Prunier admits that he put Seth in contact with Ugandans who might have
been —to back a plan organize an eastern front against Kigali. Still he
would have you believe that he is somehow an accurate scribe when it comes to
matters Rwandan.
One of Prunier’s pet arguments in discussing post-genocide
Rwanda was the US guilt over the genocide, especially the “guilt” of the Clinton
Administration, led us to buy into the RPF without doubt. We were, according to
Mr. Prunier, naí¯ve, even stupid white guys who were completely fooled by the RPF.
To make this theory fly of course one has to offer a version of the RPF that
would make Seth Sendashonga proud. Paul Kagame is to Gérard Prunier a
reincarnation of Stalin or Hitler with the military genius of Napolean thrown in
for good measure. Prunier singles out the US Department of Defense (DoD) as as
especially culpable in this combination of naivete and stupidity because it was
the US DoD that supposedly enabled little Rwanda to conquer great big Zaire not
once but nearly twice. Let me offer some examples.
On age 34, Prunier surfaces “‘good guys versus bad
guys’: preferred mode of American thinking: Department of Defense fascination
for the RPA, which it was then beginning to discover…”
In his explanatory note on this jab, Prunier offers, “Following
a limited humanitarian involvement after the genocide, the U.S. Army had started
training program for the RPA and several U.S. officers were quite impressed by
the professionalism of their counterparts. Maj (later Lt. Col.), the US
military attaché in Kigali played a key role in that warming relationship
between {the} the RPA and the U.S. Department of Defense. “
First on the good guys versus bad guys tripe, that was
hardly the case. I was impressed by RPA professionalism on the ground when I
first encountered them in 1994; I was also cognizant as was Ambassador David
Rawson that the RPA had won the military fight for Rwanda. David’s guidance to
me was to establish relations with the new government on a military to military
basis. As for “discovering” the RPA, Rwanda was already benefiting from
expanded international military education and training (E-IMET) under State
Department direction and control after the Arusha Accords were signed. The
initial phase of E-IMET took place in early 1994, attended by both former
Rwandan Army (ex-FAR) and RPA soldiers. Then Major Rick Orth was the Defense
Intelligence Agency analyst on the conflict in 1994; he joined me on the ground
for 60 days in late 1994. He replaced me as the Defense Attaché in 1996. All
of this is of course in my own book which Mr. Prunier lists in his bibliography
incorrectly as being published by the University of Texas.
On page 118, Prunier writes in discussing the taking of
Bukavu by RPA and Congolese rebel troops, “They were soon joined by a
group of about sixty African American mercenaries. According to
English-speaking Zairians who had occasion to talk with them, they had been
privately recruited in the United States and flown to Uganda, from where they
had been taken by road to Kigali and later to Bukavu. The way their passage
from the United States had been facilitated by Customs and police suggested
undeniably that they were on some kind of unofficial government mission. They
were soon battling the FDD at Mwenga and Kiliba.”
In footnoting this remarkable claim, Prunier goes on to
explain, ” It is extremely likely that they had been recruited through
what a former U.S. intelligence officer called, ‘the second-echelon little black
book,’ managed by a Los Angeles-based mercenary company run by retired U.S. top
brass who have kept good Pentagon contacts. Interview Washington DC, October
1999. On government-sanctioned operations such as the Croatian offensive in the
Kajina, they use what is known as “first-echelon people (i.e., former U.S. army
personnel with honorable discharges). For the “black operations” (i.e., covert
operations about which Congress is kept in the dark) they use second-echelon men
who are also former GIs with shady records of drug offenses, theft, or sexual
offenses. These men are contacted indirectly, through ‘friendly’ private
companies, and can include foreigners. Colette Braeckman, in L’enjeu congalais
(Paris, Fayard, 1999). 43, mentions that this company recruited a number of
Liberian Krahns for the Congo mission. As late as October 2007, U.S. government
officials were still trying to convince me that the whole operation had never
existed.”
The U.S. did support the use of mercenaries in the Congo in
the 1960s.
I have written quite extensively on the subject. The dying regime in Zaire
recruited Serbian mercenaries against the rebels and the RPF; they had little
effect on the outcome. But to posit that the U.S. would recruit drug dealing,
sexually deviate, former soldiers who were African-American to fight in the
Congo is C-rate Hollywood fiction. Interestingly this rumor has been kept alive
by writers like Prunier and other conspiracy theorists and has even been offered
in testimony to the
U.S. Congress.
On page 117 Prunier states that Rwandan forces attacked
Goma on November 1, 1996 by land and from the lake, while denying that Kigali
had a role in those operations. That much is quite true but the footnote is
most revealing when is comes to Mr. Prunier’s documentation. He states,
“The lake attack had an interesting dimension: the rubber dinghies used by the
Rwandese army belonged to the American NGO International Rescue Committee and
were apparently loaned and not commandeered. Interviews with eyewitnesses,
Paris, March 1997, and Kampala, December 2000. This was the first visible sign
of any U.S. involvement in the Rwandese invasion plan.”
First of all the RPA had its own high speed inflatable
troop transports; I rode one of them to Iwawa Island in November the previous
year. They were of Canadian manufacture, provided to Rwanda by Uganda as a gift
during Museveni’s visit in 1995. Twin-engine, with a crew served weapon mount,
radar, and capable of 20+ knots carrying 14-20 troops they were assault boats
and the RPA had at least two. I would seriously doubt that an American NGO
would “loan” its “rubber dinghies” to support the RPA. Secondly even had the
RPA commandeered or borrowed the rubber boats as alleged by Prunier, that is not
a sign of U.S. government involvement.
I will offer one final selection of Prunier’s dismal
scholarship. On page 126, he claims that the U.S. military-RPA relationship
began on 31 July 1994 when a party of 60 Amrican soldiers arrived in Kigali. I
have already noted that E-IMET training with the ex-FAR and the RPA took place
in early 1994; that course was taught by U.S. military officers from the Naval
War College. Prunier then states that the U.S. started a large training program
for the RPA in early 1995 that sent RPA officers to the U.S. and brought U.S.
soldiers to Rwanda. His reasons for the ties to the RPA was his claim in the
supporting footnotes that we as Army officers in 1994 were “”Still shaken
by their (our) Vietnam defeat and their (our) poor showing in Somalia.”
” ..the frustrated macho environment of the 1990s U.S. Army”
allowed us to justify “bending the rules to help the RPA.” I
should also remind the reader that according to Mr. Prunier we were naí¯ve and
stupid in our frustrated condition.
Back to reality, I outlined the program we began in 1995 in
my book, the one Mr. Prunier listed in his bibliography but either didn’t read
or merely ignored. E-IMET was resumed as a result of then Vice President
Kagame’s invitational visit to Washington in December 1994. In essence we
picked up where the E-IMET training begun in early 1994 left off: we sent a
small group (about 10) RPA officers for military justice training at the Naval
War College, led by then Major, and later Ambassador to the United States, Dr.
Richard Sezibera.
Another component of our assistance was humanitarian
demining. I asked Undersecretary of State Tim Wirth to push for a program when
he visited Kigali in September 1994. he did so and we began in earnest in early
1995 with a US European Command and US Special Operations Command-Europe site
visit. We took a train the trainer approach with 2 Special Forces Operations
Detachment –Alphas (A teams) under an Operations Detachment-Bravo (B Team) and
trained nearly 100 RPA deminers. We also set up a Rwanda-US Demining office
with Civil Affairs and PSYOP personnel to design a mine and unexploded ordnance
awareness program. To facilitate teaching and provide usable facilities, I got
USEUCOM to fund renovation of the Rwandan staff college, which had been
ransacked by the ex-FAR as they retreated from Kigali in 1994. In the last
quarter of 1995, USECUCOM provided end of year monies through USAID to secure a
RONCO demining dog program. All in all the program was well under USD$ 3
million, miniscule when it comes to this sort of thing and microscopic to the
amount of money flowing into the refugee camps outside the country.
The third leg of my efforts in 1995 was to take advantage
of any and all excess non-lethal material freed up by the US military drawdown
in Europe offered through the Office of the Secretary of Defense-Special
Operations and Low Intensity Conflict–Humanitarian Affairs (OSD-SOLIC, HA). One
of my partners from Goma, Mr. Bill McCoy, ran the program and I told him I would
take whatever he wanted to load on an airplane. Beginning in late 1994 through
my last day in country in March 1996, I brought in one, sometimes more, aircraft
a month with cargoes that ranged from school desks to field ambulances. One I
was most proud of was loaded with woolen army blankets and soccer balls. With
the assistance of the Rwandan Minster of Health Colonel Dr. Joe Karemera, I
delivered a truck load of those blankets to my friend, Roz Carr, and the fifty
orphans she had under her care.
Remember that we were stupid, macho frustrated army types
who sought to live out our fantasies through the RPA? Well Prunier then takes
the programs I outlined above and makes them fit the mold he has crafted for us
by declaring on page 127 we were sly dogs indeed—stupid, naí¯ve, but sly
nonetheless:
“After some American arm twisting at the UN the U.S.
Ronco Consulting Corporation got a large demining contract in Rwanda to remove
more mines than had ever been laid during the war. This has the advantage of
legitimizing the impressive U.S. military air traffic since ‘supplies’ were
needed. It was an impressive performance which was completely different in
style from the heavy-handed U.S. interventions during the cold war. It was
stealthy, light, and indirect, with one remaining superpower on earth easily
running circles around frustrated French diplomacy still caught up in the
inefficient old web of its questionable Franco-African friendships.”
Glad we impressed you Mr. Prunier. I wish I could say the
same about your book. I am disappointed that Oxford University Press would
actually print this piece of literary excrement. That publications like
Publications Weekly and professors at Princeton, Miami University, and
James Madison University provided laudatory comments for the dust cover suggest
poor scholarship is a contagious disease, especially when taken with a large
dose of conspiracy theory.
Thomas (Tom) P. Odom
LTC US Army (ret)
Author,
Journey Into Darkness: Genocide In Rwanda